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Posts from May 2007

May 27, 2007

Scam of the Month - Judge Judy Punishes an Idiotic eBay Fraudster!

In this "scam of the month", Judge Judy takes on an eBay fraudster and ultimately hands out the maximum punishment.  In spite of the fact that this scam seems audaciously ridiculous, it is actually quite common online.  Bottom-line, there are a lot of folks out there that lack any semblance of a moral compass.

My inspiration for starting buySAFE was a similar scam that I fell victim to on eBay during the summer of 2000.  The only major differences that I can point to are that I purchased a $400 PDA, and instead of taking the scammer to court with Judge Judy, I decided to instead start a company dedicated to making every online transaction trusted, reliable and risk-free... buySAFE!

Next time, I hope these two innocent victims limit their purchases to buySAFE merchants.  It will save them a whole lot of anguish and effort!

Watch this video.  It is quite enlightening.

Related articles:
"Judge Judy Episode on eBay Trust & Safety" on Psychohistory blog

May 23, 2007

The Wharton School and Entrepreneurship

The Wharton Business Plan Competition took place earlier this month, and NP Solutions was the big winner for 2007. The new venture took home the $20,000 grand prize for a business that provides a polymer based injectable hydrogel treatment for back pain.  Obviously, I wish these folks a bunch of luck with their new business.

As you may already know, I am a big fan of these collegiate competitions.  buySAFE (formerly known as BondMyAuction) is a product of the Wharton Business Plan Competition, and so I can speak from experience when I say that these events can be very useful in getting entrepreneurial ventures launched.  I actually entered the business plan competition in 2000 and 2001 with different ventures as a student.

Then after graduation, I teamed up with Peter Niessen, a 2002 MBA grad, to enter BondMyAuction in the 2002 Wharton Business Plan Competition (You need at least one current student on your team to participate, but the rest of the team can be alums, etc...).  Peter was a terrific teammate, and he and I were able to make it to the Finals of the competition.  Again, it was a great experience, and you can read about it in this recent article by the New York Times - "Beyond Grades: Business Students Put Their Start-Up Ideas to the Test"

One last interesting note for you...

Jeff Grass, buySAFE's CEO, was also a finalist in the Wharton Business Plan competition in 1999 along with his business partner, John Tedesco (John is currently the CEO & President of Guardian Mobile Monitoring Systems).  Jeff and John launched PayMyBills.com shortly after graduation, and they ultimately sold the company to PayTrust in 2000.  Today, the company's service is owned by Intuit, and it powers the bill payment and management solutions for some of the country's largest financial institutions.

Needless to say, collegiate business plan competitions can provide aspiring entrepreneurs with a generous leg up on the formidable challenges of starting up a company out of school.  For me, the Wharton Business Plan Competition experience was invaluable.

May 19, 2007

The Three Qualities of Great Entrepreneurs

Entrepreneurship is one of the most exciting things that you can choose to do as a profession.  It is also tough to be an entrepreneur.  Entrepreneurship is definitely not for the faint of heart.  I ran across this quote recently, and I thought it perfectly describes the attributes of successful entrepreneurs.

"Top people, especially entrepreneurs, seem to have these three qualities: First, they learn more things. Second, they try more things. Third, they persist longer than anyone else."

I can't source this quote unfortunately because I did not write it down at the time I originally heard it.  However, I did find it mentioned on the NVTC website with a quick Google search. The quote is right on point.  I could not have said it better myself. 

Great entrepreneurs are extremely curious people.  They are constantly seeking to learn about new stuff.  That is how they innovate and develop new ideas.  That is also how they successfully manage their ventures. 

Great entrepreneurs know that although the goal is always success, failure is to be expected as well.  If you try twice as many things as your competitors, you are twice as likely to hit on the right formula.  This requires creativity, speed and action.  It also requires a confidence to weather those pesky failures.  Again, great entrepreneurs continue working the problem until they find a solution.

Most of all, great entrepreneurs never quit.  They keep at it much longer than most folks.  They fail, but they get right back up and try again.  In my opinion, persistence is by far and away the most important quality that great entrepreneurs possess.

These also happen to be the qualities that I most admire in the folks that I hire to work in my organizations.  In start-up ventures, entrepreneurship cannot solely be the role of the founders.  Every employee needs to be entrepreneurial.  In my opinion, I would take an entrepreneurial employee over others almost any day. 

The entrepreneurs thrive in startups.  They plow new ground, and take ventures to a place they could not have been imagined before.  The "big" resume folks typically do the same things that worked in their last organization.  Unfortunately for them, most great startup ventures are doing something completely new.  That requires entrepreneurship. 

You show me a team of talented entrepreneurs working well together as a team, and you will probably also be showing me an organization that has a great chance at success.

While I am on the subject, let me also recommend a book for you to read that illustrates my last point.  "Entrepreneurial Marketing: Lessons From Wharton's Pioneering MBA Course" by Len Lodish, Wharton professor and marketing guru, is one of my favorite books.  For marketers, I believe Entrepreneurial Marketing is required reading.  The following article will give you a brief overview of the book as well as an introduction to Len and his philosophies on teaching marketing to the MBA students at Wharton: Cheaper-Better-Faster.

Enjoy and have a great weekend!

May 14, 2007

eBay Merchant Economics

I recently asked Michael Beveridge, buySAFE's Sr. Director of Business Intelligence, to share with us some of the interesting eCommerce data that buySAFE has developed over the last eighteen months.  We consider data and analytics to be critical to buySAFE and our merchant customers' businesses, and obviously, every merchant is interested in having solid, reliable data on the ROI associated with buySAFE.  At the request of hundreds of our merchant customers, buySAFE has invested heavily into developing an amazing data and analytics platform that can deliver incredible insights beneficial to buySAFE Merchants.  We will be sharing some of our new insights with you over the coming months, and I hope you enjoy the content. With that intro, here is Michael Beveridge's first contribution to this blog...

-------------------------------

When describing the challenges their online businesses face, buySAFE’s merchant customers have highlighted a couple of similar themes – including a growing sense that business on eBay is extremely competitive and the growing need to diversify their businesses across multiple online channels.

At buySAFE, we decided to shed some light on these two issues.  In the Spring of 2006, we began to conduct a detailed analysis of the business performance of nearly 200 of the most successful and respected e-retailers doing business on the web and on eBay. As head of buySAFE’s Business Intelligence group, I directed a research effort to better understand the economics and needs of our customers. Under the auspices of buySAFE’s Impact Guarantee (BIG) program, as well as detailed financial interviews and reviews with BIG participants, we have been able to build a picture of the economics of online retailers.

Understanding the financial economics for online merchants is important to buySAFE for a number of reasons.  The most important reason is that buySAFE guarantees the transactions for its merchant customers. Having strong, financially stable merchant customers is a critical requirement for buySAFE because it helps us avoid large losses due to merchant financial defaults.  The bottom-line is that helping merchants optimize their businesses is good for everyone.

I would like to point out that we are always extremely careful about not disclosing any customer specific insights.  We do aggregate the information that is collected across our entire merchant base in order to understand general trends on the whole.  We believe this information offers some very interesting insights that can benefit everyone, but again, we will never share customer specific data in any form without explicit permission from the merchant customer.

The results of our recent research, shared below, appear to confirm the conventional wisdom regarding eBay and competing channels. Specifically...

  1. Margins on eBay are very tight. Taking into account all costs of business, including listing fees, fixed overhead, product sourcing costs, etc, the average net margin on eBay is 8%. Product sectors such as cameras, cell phones and consumer electronics are particularly fierce with net margins falling to the 2-4% range.
    .
  2. Diversification across non-eBay channels has become the norm.  Merchants no longer view non-eBay channels as a “nice to have”. Rather, these channels are now critical and expanding parts of their businesses. Two out of every three merchants have already built non-eBay businesses, and the trend is accelerating very quickly.
    .
  3. Net margins on off-eBay business are significantly higher than on net margins received on eBay.  Of the 2/3 of merchants already diversified off of eBay, profitability nearly triples, as eBay net margins hover around 8% and off-eBay margins increase to 23%. Of note is that the average net margin for sellers exclusively on eBay is around 9%, while for merchants that have started diversifying off eBay, the net margins are only 8%.

It is worth noting that the merchants addressed in this buySAFE study had, on average, an eBay Feedback Rating of 33,810 and gross monthly sales of $188,000. While results for other customers may vary, this appears to be very representative of the large and professionalized portion of the eBay seller community.

This research is consistent with concerns we have heard from eBay’s merchants -- it also raises at least one important question: Why are the margins on eBay so thin?  A couple of potential answers include:

  1. eBay has become very good at extracting full rent out of its seller base. Much like the owner of prime real estate charging higher commercial rents to get a bigger piece of the value stream created by their customers -- eBay’s pricing structure seems to allow eBay to share a high proportion of the value created. This would be consistent with a consistent refrain from customers that eBay’s fees are ‘too high’. However, our study is not supportive of this conclusion. Excluding costs of goods sold, the fixed, overhead and variable costs are roughly the same for eBay and non-eBay sales. This would suggest that while listing fees may be high, they are offset by higher infrastructure and marketing costs required to sell off-eBay.
    .
  2. Online sellers see eBay solely as a “loss leader” and/or lead generation tool. While it is difficult to measure the lifetime value of a customer acquired through any channel including eBay, online retailers clearly benefit from capturing customers through one channel and then migrating these same customers to a channel with lower service costs. In our analysis, 25% of the merchants had active warranty and/or cross sales programs.  While there are obviously lots of sellers using eBay as a “loss leader”, we don’t believe this is why margins are so thin on eBay.  Rather, we believe this is actually symptomatic of the real answer to the eBay margin question.
    .
  3. Prices on eBay are less than off eBay. The adage that eBay is a mile wide and an inch thick is mainly true.  This characteristic makes it difficult to test pricing disparities directly. Simple price comparisons between the prices found in comparison shopping engine search results versus eBay search results seem to indirectly validate pricing disparities.  Anecdotal commentary by merchants clearly points to lower eBay prices.  One of many examples would be from a very large jewelry merchant who indicated to us that his "average eBay margin had fallen to about $6.00 while for the same product off eBay, his margin was now more than $45.00."  The Auction Trust Network recently published figures that suggested that off-eBay prices were, on average, 34% higher than on eBay.  Piper Jaffray & Co. recently published a report on the subject of eBay that suggests, for the luxury sunglasses segment, prices for the same product sold by the same merchant were 75% higher on Overstock.com than on eBay. 
    .
    buySAFE's research pointed to price differentials that were less severe than these examples, but nevertheless, the figures were material in nature.  In our research, customers shared the sourcing cost of their goods sold as a percentage of final sales price.  Comparing this between on-eBay vs. off-eBay sales, suggests differentials in pricing by as much as 20%.

The bottom-line, is that much of the conventional wisdom we’ve heard about selling on eBay is, in fact, correct. The marketplace is extremely competitive with very tight margins. Large professional sellers are reacting to eBay's deteriorating margins in two ways.  First, they are diversifying off eBay into higher margin channels at an accelerating pace.  Second, large merchants are also working very hard to economically differentiate themselves from the competition in a positive manner and on non-price terms.  In the case of the very large eBay merchants that helped develop these insights, they were leveraging buySAFE as one of their strategies for accomplishing meaningful differentiation. 

Plainly, these merchants adopted buySAFE in order to send a message to consumers about seller integrity in a manner that plainly influences consumer behavior and thereby boosts conversion rates.  One would expect that as a eBay sellers find their pricing power compressed to the cost line, that they will have to compete on other terms.  Safety and security should naturally emerge as a key differentiator – providing high value to shoppers at a low cost to merchants.

We expect these trends to continue and we will continue to share insights on this subject with you on a regular basis.

Related blog posts:
"What's Wrong With eBay? It's Simple Economics" by Steve Woda
"What is a Market for Lemons?" by Steve Woda

May 08, 2007

Important eCommerce Trust and Safety Statistics

At the PESA Summit this past week, there was a lot of talk about how to improve e-commerce conversion rates. I believe there are three critical drivers for conversion: product selection, price, and trust. Each of these issues would provide substantial content for an article, but I thought I would dedicate today's post to a number of very important trust-related statistics.

If you have any doubt about the role of trust and buyer confidence in your e-commerce business success, please take a quick look at these stats.

  • 55% of online shoppers say trustworthiness of the merchant is most important (vs. price, convenience, pleasure, other)
    (Source: Online Shopper Research Report, 959 respondents, August 2006)
  • 65% of online shoppers buy only from sites they know and trust
    (Source: VeriSign Secured Seal Research Review 08/06)
  • 72% of online shoppers are becoming more cautious when buying online
    (Source: Gartner Research, 5000 respondents, May 2005 survey)
  • 73% of online shoppers are concerned about the item being misrepresented (inaccurately described, counterfeit)
    (Source: Online Shopper Research Report, 959 respondents, 08/06)
  • 76% of online shoppers are worried about never getting their purchase
    (Source: Online Shopper Research Report, 959 respondents, 08/06)
  • 81% of online shoppers are concerned about merchant return/refund policies not being honored
    (Source: Online Shopper Research Report, 959 respondents, 08/06)
  • 84% of online shoppers are concerned about merchants not treating them fairly
    (Source: Online Shopper Research Report, 959 respondents, 08/06)
  • 85% of online shoppers are concerned about identity theft
    (Source: TNS Research, 08/06) 
  • And, amazingly, over 50% of all U.S. internet users still don’t buy online (even from Amazon.com!).
    (Source: Bear Stearns, September 2006)

With respect to this last statistic, "trust" issues are the primary driver of e-commerce non-participation. Amazingly, more than 50% of your potential customers will not buy online because they are nervous! Are you kidding me? That is a huge number, and obviously, the time has come for the e-commerce industry to take this issue seriously.

May 04, 2007

buySAFE and eBay Live 2007

It's official. buySAFE is going to throw a terrific event in Boston the second week of June.  However, the company has decided to skip exhibiting at eBay's annual conference, eBay Live. Instead, buySAFE has decided that it would rather participate in a number of other e-commerce conferences that it believes provide better return on investment including the huge Internet Retailer Conference in San Jose. You can read about buySAFE's eBay LIve 2007 decision on the buySAFE blog article - "Are You Going to eBay Live?".

I have a lot to say on this subject that I believe you will find quite interesting.  However, in the interest of time this morning, I will have to revisit my eBay Live thoughts in the coming weeks.  Please stay tuned.

See you in Boston!

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